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Words that sound like "earn" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(transitive) To gain (success, reward, recognition) through applied effort or work.
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(n)
A vessel for the ashes or cremains of a deceased person.
(UK dialectal) To run; flow.
A sea eagle (Haliaeetus), especially the white-tailed eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla)
Obsolete spelling of urn. [A vase with a footed base.]
(transport, railway) Initialism of RailNetEurope, a non-profit-making association aiming to enable fast and easy access to the European rail network.
(computing) Initialism of enterprise relationship management.
(gaming, informal) Randomness, variability, or luck, especially that produced by random number generation.
Initialism of underrepresented minority.
Initialism of information rights management.
(intransitive, obsolete) To grieve; to feel sad.
(Hong Kong, Singapore, chiefly text messaging or Internet slang) Pseudo-acronym of remember.
A grain used extensively in Europe for making bread, beer, and (now generally) for animal fodder.
(adj)
Turned or twisted toward one side; crooked, distorted, out of place; wry.
Dryly humorous; sardonic or bitterly ironic.
(UK, historical) Initialism of renewable heat incentive (“a payment system for the generation of heat from renewable energy sources”).
(regional) Distortion.
(N)
Ruy or Ruj, is a mountain range in the Kraishte region on the border of western Bulgaria and southeastern Serbia.
A surname.
(adv)
So as to form a circle or trace a circular path, or approximation thereof.
A physical injury caused by heat, cold, electricity, radiation or caustic chemicals.
An occurrence of the interjection "er".
(marketing) Not paid for; appearing in media on its own merits.
(business, of a customer) To stop using a company's product or service.
(intransitive, formal) To make a mistake.
The machine that draws random premium bond numbers in the United Kingdom.
A diminutive of the male given name Arnold.
One who earns money.
A federal city of Switzerland; the capital city of Bern canton.
(UK) A gatepost or doorpost.
European Council for Nuclear Research
(British) To make a grotesque or funny face; to grimace.
(with on, (archaic) for) To officially charge someone in a court of law.
A surname from Irish.
An extinct Yeniseian language formerly spoken in Russia.
(dialectal or poetic) Heron.
Abbreviation of brown (eye or hair color). [Having a brown colour.]
A male given name from the Germanic languages occasionally used in English.
(US, informal, euphemistic) darn; damn.
(biochemistry) Alternative form of eRNA.
A surname
(obsolete) To grin.
(Scotland, Northern England) To whinge, moan, complain.
Alternative form of quern. [A mill for grinding corn, especially a handmill made of two circular stones.]
Abbreviation of green (eye or hair color). [Of a green hue.]
A department of Normandy, France. Capital: Évreux (INSEE code 27).
A village and civil parish in Forest of Dean district, Gloucestershire, England (OS grid ref SO7008).
Archaic form of eyrie. [The nest of a bird of prey.]
Alternative form of dern. [(obsolete) A secret; secrecy.]
the name of two fictional DC Comics superheroes.
(organic chemistry) Any monocyclic or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon.
(neuroanatomy) Initialism of dorsal raphe nucleus.
A female given name from Ancient Greek.
A minor river in Dorset, England, which joins the River Frome at Dorchester.